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Identifying and Dealing with Anger in the Classroom

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Title: Identifying and Dealing with Anger in the Classroom


1
Identifying and Dealing with Anger in the
Classroom
  • By
  • Alicia Gail Bryant
  • EMG 807
  • July 2002

2
Whos Angry?
  • Anger is a normal human emotion. Everyone
    experiences anger at some time for various
    reasons.
  • Anger is part of any human relationship, even (or
    maybe especially) student/teacher relationships.
  • Anger is cumulative and transferable.
  • in other words, anyone can be angry! However,
    some students are angrier than others.

3
Types of Anger
  • Explosive
  • Visible, quick to appear
  • Little planning or thought is involved
  • Uncontrolled behavior
  • Not deep-seated
  • Little skill needed to help work through the anger

4
  • Passive
  • Covert not easily noticed
  • Planning involved
  • Kid is in control of their behavior
  • Anger is deep, and though kid may need to talk
    about it, he/she may have trouble doing so
  • Moderate skill required to help kid work through
    the anger

5
  • Implosive
  • Invisible to others
  • Emotions are out of control and dictate behavior
  • Often kid doesnt even know he/she is angry
  • Anger is hidden inside, and may be very difficult
    to uncover
  • Professional help is needed to deal with these
    situations
  • This kind of anger can be caused by repeated
    abuse, either emotional or physical, often by
    peers. School shooters exhibit implosive anger.

6
Phases of Escalation of Anger
  • Calm
  • Trigger
  • Something that sets a person off
  • Agitation
  • Acceleration
  • Peak
  • De-escalation
  • Recovery
  • Hopefully, we can stop a crisis situation before
    it gets to the peak phase

7
Characteristics of Stages of Escalation
  • Calm
  • Student is on task and following rules. He or
    she responds well to praise. The student will
    initiate good behavior. He or she is focused on
    the goal before them, and interacts appropriately
    with adults and peers.
  • Trigger
  • The student is denied something he needs or
    receives a negative consequence. The student may
    be provoked, be submitted to a change in routine,
    or experience a high pressure situation. They
    may also have suffered a series of problems that
    they have been unable to solve.

8
  • Agitation
  • As the student becomes agitated, her eyes may
    dart back and forth. She may begin to use non
    conversational language, and move in and out of
    various groups, with the result being having no
    membership in any group. At the other end of the
    spectrum, students may withdraw, stare into
    space, stop working, and become still and silent.

9
  • Acceleration
  • As momentum increases, students may begin arguing
    and pushing back verbally. They will stop
    working and become non-compliant and defiant.
    They will begin to provoke other students and
    adults as their anger escalates. Some kids will
    cry, others will also walk out to escape the
    situation altogether. They may threaten,
    intimidate, or verbally abuse others.

10
  • Peak
  • Once students reach their peak, they may strike
    others or themselves, throw extreme tantrums, or
    hyperventilate. They may also scream and run, or
    resort to other types of violence. In extreme
    cases, the lives of those around the angered
    student become endangered.

11
  • De-escalation
  • As the student begins to subside, they may
    become confused, withdraw from the situation and
    those around him or her, or go to sleep. They
    often deny what they have done, or blame others
    for the situation. They may go back to the task
    they previously abandoned, or respond well to new
    directions. They generally avoid any discussion
    of the situation that doesnt involve blaming
    others.

12
  • Recovery
  • Students may become subdued as they recover from
    an escalated episode of demonstrated anger. At
    times, they may be defensive, but are often ready
    to begin work again on their own. As with
    de-escalation, they tend not to want to discuss
    the situation.

13
Varying Experiences
  • Since each student is different, no two students
    experience the phases of escalation in the same
    way or in the same time frame.
  • However, the adults working with students prone
    to outbursts of anger must work to identify the
    stages in individual students, and stop the
    process at the earliest possible stage.

14
How can teachers intervene to stop the escalation
process?
  • Interventions at each of the stages of escalation
    are possible. The following strategies can often
    stop or prevent the escalation process
  • Calm phase
  • Provide a structured classroom with quality
    instruction and adequate attention for all
    students
  • Trigger phase
  • Provide students with formal methods for solving
    problems. In addition, many students also need
    an individual plan in the event of a problem.

15
  • Agitation phase
  • Students who have reached the agitation phase
    often need personal space and time to relax. The
    teacher needs to remain close and provide
    independent or movement activities, depending on
    the individual. Students need to be involved in
    planning what is appropriate.

16
  • Acceleration phase
  • Once students reach this phase, teachers need to
    carefully monitor voice tone, and remain calm,
    respectful, and detached. Students need a
    face-saving escape, and pre-planned strategies
    should be used.
  • Peak phase
  • Teachers need to consider physical safety needs
    of all present. Later teachers need to look at
    possible behavior patterns leading up to such an
    event.

17
  • De-escalation phase
  • This is the time for isolation and cool-down
    time. Students can work independently, and the
    classroom can be physically restored, if
    necessary. Other students can resume regular
    activities, and the student(s) involved can be
    dispositioned at this time.

18
  • Recovery phase
  • Focus on normal activities and routines. Some
    actions have serious consequences, and these
    should not be sugar-coated. Teachers should
    communicate expectations that the student can
    succeed and meet standards. The student should
    be involved in planning ways to avoid such
    episodes, and the episode should be closed at
    this time.

19
Anger appears to be on the rise. Where is this
increase coming from?
  • Changes in the American family structure and
    dynamics
  • Increasing poverty in the U.S.
  • Increase in instances of child abuse and neglect
  • Increase in exposure to violence (media, etc.)

20
When anger works in concert with violence and
fear, rage results. Fear is often the basis for
anger
  • What are todays kids most fearful of?
  • Losing a parent (to death, divorce, a
    step-parent, etc.)
  • Losing face with peers
  • Going blind
  • Getting hurt (especially at school)
  • Being poor or homeless

21
If everyone feels anger, why dont all kids react
with violence?
  • In the middle class, verbal responses are often
    used, and can even be an effective way to deal
    with situations.
  • When kids are affected by poverty, effective
    verbal responses are often not known or
    respected. A physical response may be all that
    many kids feel they have access to, or all that
    is understood.

22
How can you deal with anger in your classroom?
  • Make sure your classroom is highly structured.
    Kids who are angry, especially those who
    experience implosive anger, do not deal well with
    inconsistency.
  • Build positive relationships with students. Make
    sure the environment is safe, comfortable
    socially, and learning takes place.
  • Validate anger. Acknowledgement is important if
    anger is not to be buried.
  • Teach kids to work through and solve problems.
  • Have a plan in place for dealing with out of
    control situations. What kinds of things will
    you do and say? Plan your responses and actions.
  • Model and teach positive responses to anger.

23
References
  • Straughn, L. (2002, July 10). Understanding and
    working with angry students You must first seek
    to understand if you are to be understood.
    Educating Kentuckys At-Risk Kids Best
    Practices for Alternative and Non-Traditional
    Settings. Conference at Eastern Kentucky
    University, Richmond, KY.
  • Whitaker, J. (2002, July 10). Positive
    behavioral support systems/Universal Tier Model.
    Educating Kentuckys At-Risk Kids Best
    Practices for Alternative and Non-Traditional
    Settings. Conference at Eastern Kentucky
    University, Richmond, KY.
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